It was a rainy commute home for many people last night. Not too miserable though, just enough drizzle to bring out a few umbrellas and create some wonderful reflections to play with.
Posts Tagged ‘bike’
it rained last night
Posted: October 24, 2017 in people, reflections, transportationTags: bike, car, city, crosswalk, dark, downtown, lights, night, pedestrians, people, rain, reflections, sidewalk, sky, streetcar, tree, TTC, umbrella, wet, windows
walking dundas and dufferin
Posted: September 29, 2017 in doors, old buildings, stores, windows and wallsTags: alley, apartment building, bike, cars, door, downtown, entrance, fence, free library, front yard, grominator, house, row houses, street, street art, street scene, urban, walls, window, yard, yellow door
Yesterday I was out near Dundas West and Dufferin to visit an art gallery, the Stephen Bulger Gallery, as they have a showing of photos of the Union Station renovation by Larry Towell. I don’t have any photos from that exhibit, but it is on for another week if you’re interested.
Instead, I have photos from the walk that I took afterwards. I started walking west on Dundas and south on Dufferin, looking for interesting doors, windows, and stores. I wasn’t disappointed. Of course, I was distracted (alleys!) along the way (graffiti!) but I have tried to stick to the architectural shots for this post. Sort of. In no particular order….
below: There was a car parked in front of this building so I cropped off the bottom. The optical illusion covered the whole front of the building. It’s definitely unique!
below: Two people walk past a forest of trees and shrubs.
below: Lisboa Hardware and Building Supplies with many household items on display outside – including barbecues, watering cans, and carpets. Old paintings linger on the tile wall.
below: A blue bike is parked in front of the french doors of the Black Dice Cafe.
below: A very typical two storey house in this part of Toronto. This was the predominate style of architecture of residential buildings at a certain time – late 1800’s and early 1900’s I think (and maybe longer?). I like the Canadian flag in the window and the new tree in the tiny front yard.
below: On Dufferin Street, an increasingly common scene as glass towers pop up all over the city. The west side of Dufferin Street, just north of Queen.
below: A similar scene on a smaller street nearby.
below: Distractions in an alley – this one was a dead end (with the dead end behind me). One of the disadvantages of having your garage in an alley like this is that getting your lawn mower from the garage to the yard involves a bit of a walk. But look at all those doors and windows in buildings that look like they’ve been painted from the same palate.
below: Another alley with a different character. An open door covered with graffiti, balconies above the garages, and what is that? – a TTC pole at the top of the stairs?
below: The entranceway of an older brick low-rise apartment building on St. Clarens Ave.
below: Another distraction! A crochet bombed pole beside a bright pink wall.
below: I happened upon this cute little free library too – so cute and whimsical with its big eyes keeping watch. There has been some controversy about these in Toronto recently. One owner of little library was ticketed for violating a city bylaw that disallows structures on a person’s property within 3.5 metres of a sidewalk. It was ordered removed within 14 days or a $100 fine would be levied. Yesterday City Hall decided not to pursue this.
below: Nearby was another little free library with a little latched door. It seems that here you can also pick up a pair of shoes along with a book!
below: Did I find Toronto’s smallest house?
below: Somewhere in the jungle is a front door or two! A shared sidewalk to squabble over in the winter – who gets to shovel it.
below: Gates. I’ve never understood the reason for little gates like these. Back in their youth they probably looked quite trim and proper. Now they are sagging and rusted and showing their age; perhaps that’s a reflection of their owners? Not a complaint – a rusted gate has great photographic potential.
below: Fire damage that is now being repaired. The neighbours seem to have built a thriving shrine (good luck charm?, religious offering? is there a name for these?) beside their front door.
below: We have our share of ugly doors on ugly walls.
below: Have a seat
below: On Dufferin Street between Dundas and Queen – Once upon a time this house was totally decorated in pink and white. Some of it remains – the arch in front of the door as well as the fence at the side of the house. Now it is bigger, squarer, and uglier. Even the grominator graffiti on the wall can’t overcome the ‘boringness’ of the renovated structure.
below: I don’t want to end this post on an ugly note, so here’s a cheerful bright yellow door!
Riders at New Moon Variety
Posted: September 14, 2017 in graffiti and street artTags: bee, bike, blue birds, Bruno Smoky, clandestinos, cyclist, door window, fox, garage door, Harbord St., mural, new moon variety, shalak, Shalak Attack, smoky, street art
At the corner of Roxton and Harbord, at what was once the New Moon Variety store, there is a large and colourful Clandestinos mural. The store is now Riders Cycle so it is apt that the mural features a large cyclist, a dapper fox with bright red cycling gloves and a wicker basket full of flowers and carrots.
A blue bird at the left flying in front of the garage door.
The window now looks like it protrudes from the wall and is part of the mural.
Like all good cyclists, he has a light on his bike but this light is a miniature person with a powerful flashlight.
buzzzzzzzzzzzzz
Another blue bird in flight, this time at the righthand side of the mural.
diversity on Rhodes
Posted: July 26, 2017 in doors, locations, windows and wallsTags: #Thursdaydoors, bike, buddhist, chua hue lam, church, doors, Fatih mosque, fence, gospel, houses, Lighthouse Gospel Church, mosque, painting, redevelopment, Rhodes Ave., temple, wheel
Let’s take a ride up the south end of Rhodes Ave. Why Rhodes? In a two block stretch (from Queen to Gerrard) there are mostly residences but there are some interesting other things sprinkled amongst the houses. The photo above is the side entrance to Velotique, a bike store, on the corner of Rhodes and Queen St. East.
below: Just north of Queen Street is the Toronto Gospel Lighthouse Church which has been on this site for about 50 years.
below: I am not sure if this is still a working church. Their facebook page hasn’t been updated in over a year. Also, the yellow paper on the wall is an application for consent to divide the lot into 6 smaller lots and build houses on them. The six blue notices are applications for minor variances from the zoning bylaws, one for each dwelling. By the looks of it, the plan is to build 6 three storey semi-divided houses here. Each house required 29 minor variances – the house is a little higher, the driveway a little narrower, the front yard a little smaller, etc than the present bylaws. The case was heard at the end of January but I don’t know what the verdict was.
Farther up Rhodes Avenue is an old building that was once the home of the local chapter of the Orange Order, a Protestant fraternal organization. It was put up for sale in 1969 and subsequently purchased by the Islamic Foundation of Toronto and turned into a mosque.
below: The Fatih Mosque (when I first saw it I thought it said Faith Mosque!) with it’s two small minarets topped with gold cresents that adorn the front entrance.
below: Right beside the mosque is house with no working front door. It also has a sign in the window – a building permit of course. There is will soon be a three storey building with three apartments if the sign is correct. Here the development process is farther along than at the church down the road as this site already has a protective fence around the tree that’s growing city property.
A church, a mosque… and a Buddhist church. I thought Buddhists had temples but this one is a church. Is there a difference? Or is it just a translation thing? Ahhhhh, online they are a temple. This is the home of the Blooming Forest Bhikkhuni Buddhist Association. The “about us” page on their website is a pdf written in Vietnamese so I can’t tell you much about them!
below: At the corner of Rhodes and Gerrard is the Flying Pony Coffee Shop with its bright and colourful doors both in the front…..
The houses on the street are a mix of large and small, old and newly renovated. Here is a selection of them, and of their doors….
below: … and a picket fence too.
below: And at the last house, I leave you “Happy Holidays” greetings from Santa and myself. Santa’s busy already, driving the train around toy town in preparation for another Christmas!
Are you a fan of photos of doors? Check out the blog Norm 2.0 for links to many more!
Niagara Street peeps
Posted: April 8, 2015 in graffiti and street art, locationsTags: bike, graffiti, Li-Hill, make it, man, mural, owl head, painted, paper, people, posters, riders, street art, wheatpaste, woman, yip yap, yipyaps
Street art and murals
close to the intersection of Niagara Street and Graffiti Alley.
below: A mural on the side of a house on Niagara Street.
Some of the paint is starting to peel but otherwise it is in good shape.
Signature at the top right seems to be Robert Rian Cruz. Other names are written on the bottom left: doz, nose, cora, anto, wizwon, flur, and markis
below: Make It by Aaron Li-Hill
In Graffiti Alley but visible from Queen St. West at Niagara.
Chinatown mural
Posted: February 27, 2015 in graffiti and street art, locationsTags: Aaron Li-Hill, Alexa Hatanaka, alley, bike, child, Chinatown, Chinatown BIA, Chinese, city, downtown, Dundas St. West, lane, man, mural, people, street art, Toronto
under the tracks at Bathurst
Posted: November 28, 2014 in graffiti and street art, locationsTags: bathurst st., bike, boys, bridge, city, cyclist, Elicser, faces, feet, girders, girls, hands, men, miniature, murals, painting, people, railway, reaching, road, sitting, sneakers, street art, Toronto, underpass, urban, watching, women


















































































